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65A - RPT - REGARDING MEDICAL MARIJUANA INITIATIVE
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65A - RPT - REGARDING MEDICAL MARIJUANA INITIATIVE
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Last modified
4/6/2017 4:28:57 PM
Creation date
3/14/2013 4:00:37 PM
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City Clerk
Doc Type
Agenda Packet
Agency
Planning & Building
Item #
65A
Date
3/18/2013
Destruction Year
2018
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existing in California can claim that status. Consequently, they are not primary caregivers <br />and are subject to prosecution under both California and federal laws. <br />HOW EXISTING DISPENSARIES OPERATE <br />Despite their clear illegality, some cities do have existing and operational dispensaries. Assuming, <br />arguendo, that they may operate, it may be helpful to review the mechanics of the business. The <br />former Green Cross dispensary in San Francisco illustrates how a typical marijuana dispensary <br />works. 29 <br />A guard or employee may check for medical marijuana cards or physician recommendations at the <br />entrance. Many types and grades of marijuana are usually available. Although employees are <br />neither pharmacists nor doctors, sales clerks will probably make recommendations about what type <br />of marijuana will best relieve a given medical symptom. Baked goods containing marijuana may be <br />available and sold, although there is usually no health permit to sell baked goods. The dispensary <br />will give the patient a form to sign declaring that the dispensary is their "primary caregiver" (a <br />process fraught with legal difficulties). The patient then selects the marijuana desired and is told <br />what the "contribution" will be for the product. The California Health & Safety Code specifically <br />prohibits the sale of marijuana to a patient, so "contributions" are made to reimburse the dispensary <br />for its time and care in making "product" available. However, if a calculation is made based on the <br />available evidence, it is clear that these "contributions" can easily add up to millions of dollars per <br />year. That is a very large cash flow for a "non-profit" organization denying any participation in the <br />retail sale of narcotics. Before its application to renew its business license was denied by the City of <br />San Francisco, there were single days that Green Cross sold $45,000 worth of marijuana. On <br />Saturdays, Green Cross could sell marijuana to forty-three patients an hour. The marijuana sold at <br />the dispensary was obtained from growers who brought it to the store in backpacks. A medium- <br />sized backpack would hold approximately $16,000 worth of marijuana. Green Cross used many <br />different marijuana growers. <br />It is clear that dispensaries are running as if they are businesses, not legally valid cooperatives. <br />Additionally, they claim to be the "primary caregivers" of patients. This is a spurious claim. As <br />discussed above, the term "primary caregiver" has a very specific meaning and defined legal <br />qualifications. A primary caregiver is an individual who has "consistently assumed responsibility <br />for the housing, health, or safety of a patient." 30 The statutory definition includes some clinics, <br />health care facilities, residential care facilities, and hospices. If more than one patient designates the <br />same person as the primary caregiver, all individuals must reside in the same city or county. In most <br />circumstances the primary caregiver must be at least 18 years of age. <br />It is almost impossible for a storefront marijuana business to gain true primary caregiver status. A <br />business would have to prove that it "consistently had assumed responsibility for [a patient's] <br />housing, health, or safety."$1 The key to being a primary caregiver is not simply that marijuana is <br />provided for a patient's health: the responsibility for the patient's health must be consistent. <br />As seen in the Green Cross example, a storefront marijuana business's relationship with a patient is <br />most likely transitory. In order to provide a qualified patient with marijuana, a storefront marijuana <br />business must create an instant "primary caregiver" relationship with him. The very fact that the <br />relationship is instant belies any consistency in their relationship and the requirement that housing, <br />health, or safety is consistently provided. Courts have found that a patient's act of signing a piece of <br />paper declaring that someone is a primary caregiver does not necessarily make that person one. The <br />© 2009 California Police Chiefs Assn. 7 All Rights Reserved <br />65A-68
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